Experiencing high fever












2















How can I express the idea "Now I am experiencing high fever" in response to an enquiry?










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    In relaxed conversational contexts, you have a [high] fever.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jan 6 at 15:56
















2















How can I express the idea "Now I am experiencing high fever" in response to an enquiry?










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migrated from english.stackexchange.com Jan 6 at 15:26


This question came from our site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts.











  • 2





    In relaxed conversational contexts, you have a [high] fever.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jan 6 at 15:56














2












2








2








How can I express the idea "Now I am experiencing high fever" in response to an enquiry?










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How can I express the idea "Now I am experiencing high fever" in response to an enquiry?







present-continuous






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asked Jan 6 at 15:20







Mathew KJ











migrated from english.stackexchange.com Jan 6 at 15:26


This question came from our site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts.






migrated from english.stackexchange.com Jan 6 at 15:26


This question came from our site for linguists, etymologists, and serious English language enthusiasts.










  • 2





    In relaxed conversational contexts, you have a [high] fever.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jan 6 at 15:56














  • 2





    In relaxed conversational contexts, you have a [high] fever.

    – FumbleFingers
    Jan 6 at 15:56








2




2





In relaxed conversational contexts, you have a [high] fever.

– FumbleFingers
Jan 6 at 15:56





In relaxed conversational contexts, you have a [high] fever.

– FumbleFingers
Jan 6 at 15:56










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















1














The usual form of verb to use when telling of an illness or condition is the simple present. You would say "I have a high fever", or more casually, "I have got a high fever".



Have and have got






share|improve this answer


























  • Feverish us a generic term. It doesn’t refer to high fever specifically.

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:44



















-2














To be more precise,
a fever can be:





  • low grade, from 100.5–102.1°F or 38.1–39°C


  • moderate, from 102.2–104.0°F or 39.1–40°C


  • high, from 104.1–106.0°F to or 40.1-41.1°C


  • hyperpyrexia, above 106.0°F or 41.1°C





(Wikipedia)



So you can say you have/are experiencing a low, moderate or high fever according to the temperature.



From The Complementary Therapist's Guide to Conventional Medicine :




If a high fever is not responding to your treatment in two days, this suggests the possibility of a serious condition which ...







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Those ranges given by Wikipedia are only used in the medical profession. Nobody else has a need for such precision, and hyperpyrexia isn’t used in everyday language at all.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:19






  • 1





    @Laurel if you call your doctor because you are feverish, the first question they’ll ask you is about how high your temperature is. If you have a high fever, that’s what you’ll tell them,

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:42






  • 2





    If they ask, you give them the number. Saying you have a high fever will just make them ask if you know the number because there is no standardization for anyone who isn’t a doctor.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:47











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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









1














The usual form of verb to use when telling of an illness or condition is the simple present. You would say "I have a high fever", or more casually, "I have got a high fever".



Have and have got






share|improve this answer


























  • Feverish us a generic term. It doesn’t refer to high fever specifically.

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:44
















1














The usual form of verb to use when telling of an illness or condition is the simple present. You would say "I have a high fever", or more casually, "I have got a high fever".



Have and have got






share|improve this answer


























  • Feverish us a generic term. It doesn’t refer to high fever specifically.

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:44














1












1








1







The usual form of verb to use when telling of an illness or condition is the simple present. You would say "I have a high fever", or more casually, "I have got a high fever".



Have and have got






share|improve this answer















The usual form of verb to use when telling of an illness or condition is the simple present. You would say "I have a high fever", or more casually, "I have got a high fever".



Have and have got







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 6 at 18:50

























answered Jan 6 at 15:35









Michael HarveyMichael Harvey

13.5k11330




13.5k11330













  • Feverish us a generic term. It doesn’t refer to high fever specifically.

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:44



















  • Feverish us a generic term. It doesn’t refer to high fever specifically.

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:44

















Feverish us a generic term. It doesn’t refer to high fever specifically.

– user070221
Jan 6 at 16:44





Feverish us a generic term. It doesn’t refer to high fever specifically.

– user070221
Jan 6 at 16:44













-2














To be more precise,
a fever can be:





  • low grade, from 100.5–102.1°F or 38.1–39°C


  • moderate, from 102.2–104.0°F or 39.1–40°C


  • high, from 104.1–106.0°F to or 40.1-41.1°C


  • hyperpyrexia, above 106.0°F or 41.1°C





(Wikipedia)



So you can say you have/are experiencing a low, moderate or high fever according to the temperature.



From The Complementary Therapist's Guide to Conventional Medicine :




If a high fever is not responding to your treatment in two days, this suggests the possibility of a serious condition which ...







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Those ranges given by Wikipedia are only used in the medical profession. Nobody else has a need for such precision, and hyperpyrexia isn’t used in everyday language at all.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:19






  • 1





    @Laurel if you call your doctor because you are feverish, the first question they’ll ask you is about how high your temperature is. If you have a high fever, that’s what you’ll tell them,

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:42






  • 2





    If they ask, you give them the number. Saying you have a high fever will just make them ask if you know the number because there is no standardization for anyone who isn’t a doctor.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:47
















-2














To be more precise,
a fever can be:





  • low grade, from 100.5–102.1°F or 38.1–39°C


  • moderate, from 102.2–104.0°F or 39.1–40°C


  • high, from 104.1–106.0°F to or 40.1-41.1°C


  • hyperpyrexia, above 106.0°F or 41.1°C





(Wikipedia)



So you can say you have/are experiencing a low, moderate or high fever according to the temperature.



From The Complementary Therapist's Guide to Conventional Medicine :




If a high fever is not responding to your treatment in two days, this suggests the possibility of a serious condition which ...







share|improve this answer





















  • 2





    Those ranges given by Wikipedia are only used in the medical profession. Nobody else has a need for such precision, and hyperpyrexia isn’t used in everyday language at all.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:19






  • 1





    @Laurel if you call your doctor because you are feverish, the first question they’ll ask you is about how high your temperature is. If you have a high fever, that’s what you’ll tell them,

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:42






  • 2





    If they ask, you give them the number. Saying you have a high fever will just make them ask if you know the number because there is no standardization for anyone who isn’t a doctor.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:47














-2












-2








-2







To be more precise,
a fever can be:





  • low grade, from 100.5–102.1°F or 38.1–39°C


  • moderate, from 102.2–104.0°F or 39.1–40°C


  • high, from 104.1–106.0°F to or 40.1-41.1°C


  • hyperpyrexia, above 106.0°F or 41.1°C





(Wikipedia)



So you can say you have/are experiencing a low, moderate or high fever according to the temperature.



From The Complementary Therapist's Guide to Conventional Medicine :




If a high fever is not responding to your treatment in two days, this suggests the possibility of a serious condition which ...







share|improve this answer















To be more precise,
a fever can be:





  • low grade, from 100.5–102.1°F or 38.1–39°C


  • moderate, from 102.2–104.0°F or 39.1–40°C


  • high, from 104.1–106.0°F to or 40.1-41.1°C


  • hyperpyrexia, above 106.0°F or 41.1°C





(Wikipedia)



So you can say you have/are experiencing a low, moderate or high fever according to the temperature.



From The Complementary Therapist's Guide to Conventional Medicine :




If a high fever is not responding to your treatment in two days, this suggests the possibility of a serious condition which ...








share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jan 6 at 16:16

























answered Jan 6 at 16:05









user070221user070221

4,8911933




4,8911933








  • 2





    Those ranges given by Wikipedia are only used in the medical profession. Nobody else has a need for such precision, and hyperpyrexia isn’t used in everyday language at all.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:19






  • 1





    @Laurel if you call your doctor because you are feverish, the first question they’ll ask you is about how high your temperature is. If you have a high fever, that’s what you’ll tell them,

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:42






  • 2





    If they ask, you give them the number. Saying you have a high fever will just make them ask if you know the number because there is no standardization for anyone who isn’t a doctor.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:47














  • 2





    Those ranges given by Wikipedia are only used in the medical profession. Nobody else has a need for such precision, and hyperpyrexia isn’t used in everyday language at all.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:19






  • 1





    @Laurel if you call your doctor because you are feverish, the first question they’ll ask you is about how high your temperature is. If you have a high fever, that’s what you’ll tell them,

    – user070221
    Jan 6 at 16:42






  • 2





    If they ask, you give them the number. Saying you have a high fever will just make them ask if you know the number because there is no standardization for anyone who isn’t a doctor.

    – Laurel
    Jan 6 at 16:47








2




2





Those ranges given by Wikipedia are only used in the medical profession. Nobody else has a need for such precision, and hyperpyrexia isn’t used in everyday language at all.

– Laurel
Jan 6 at 16:19





Those ranges given by Wikipedia are only used in the medical profession. Nobody else has a need for such precision, and hyperpyrexia isn’t used in everyday language at all.

– Laurel
Jan 6 at 16:19




1




1





@Laurel if you call your doctor because you are feverish, the first question they’ll ask you is about how high your temperature is. If you have a high fever, that’s what you’ll tell them,

– user070221
Jan 6 at 16:42





@Laurel if you call your doctor because you are feverish, the first question they’ll ask you is about how high your temperature is. If you have a high fever, that’s what you’ll tell them,

– user070221
Jan 6 at 16:42




2




2





If they ask, you give them the number. Saying you have a high fever will just make them ask if you know the number because there is no standardization for anyone who isn’t a doctor.

– Laurel
Jan 6 at 16:47





If they ask, you give them the number. Saying you have a high fever will just make them ask if you know the number because there is no standardization for anyone who isn’t a doctor.

– Laurel
Jan 6 at 16:47


















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